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Discover LudwigThe phrase "having a brilliant time" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe someone enjoying themselves or experiencing great pleasure during an event or activity.
Example: "At the party last night, everyone was laughing and dancing; we were truly having a brilliant time."
Alternatives: "having a great time" or "enjoying ourselves immensely."
Exact(9)
Again, we're focusing on a couple of families who aren't having a brilliant time.
"Now I am in economics I am having a brilliant time," she said.
"I was a hippy, and having a brilliant time," she recalls.
Steal this: On oral sex: "I feel like I have to look like I'm having a brilliant time, for morale".
I think they're having a brilliant time – they're really, really excited about the idea of adventure and are pointing themselves in that direction".
Viewers have stuck with Peep Show for 12 years – several aeons in sitcom time – because they connect with Mark and Jeremy's sense of being perennial outsiders, says Webb. "Mark and Jeremy have this feeling that everyone else is having a brilliant time and that they're the only ones left in their own weird puddle.
Similar(51)
I had a brilliant time at freshers' week.
They're all the same.' "We had a brilliant time".
"We had a brilliant time in South Africa - apart from the football," she said.
"I'm sorry to be leaving G2, having had a brilliant time there".
This lot should see you through the big day – have a brilliant time.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com